The Silsbee Bee (Silsbee, Tex.), Vol. 16, No. 24, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 14, 1934 Page: 2 of 4
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SILSBEE DRUG CO
Cool Yourself at
Our Fountain
or - -
“Wilt thou not?”
Where the drinks are
colder and the service
-
We Serve Looney ’$ Ice Cream
i “Wilt
thou”
0 s v
§
Hardin Drug Company
REMEMBER!
That Sunday Is
FATHER’S DAY
Why not make him happy by giving him a
gift he will appreciate. Here are a few sug-
gestions:
FISHING RODS, LINES AND LURES
A BOX OF FAVORITE CIGARS
A NEW RAZOR—A NEW PIPE
FATHER’S DAY CARDS
RAZOR BLADES, Etc.
SEEING IS BELIEVING
SHOWER FOR MISS MARSHALL
PIANO BARGAINS
iS42SY
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HOW MANY CANS PER BUSHEL
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E5SE
l JX /XJXAAA A. AJX A A A A A A AAA A A AAA
SARATOGA CLUB HOSTESS
TO COUNTY MEETING
Standard policies with no rate-up are given to Engineers,
Firemen, Conductors, Breakmen, Flagmen, Baggagemen, Ex-
press Messengers, Mail Clerks, Equipment Inspectors, Shop In-
spectors, Blacksmiths, Boilmakers, and nearly all.other railroad
men.
President Reynolds of the Kansas City Life Insurance says,
“Railroad men are good risks.”
The Kansas City Life is an Old Line Legal Reserve Com-
pany writing only first class risks.
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BROOK-MAYS & COMPANY
1030 Pearl Street -:- BEAUMONT, TEXAS
GOOD NEWS FOR RAIL-
ROAD MEN
Peas (blackeye or cream) 16 no. 2
or 10 no. 3 cans; Squash, 30 no. 2
or20 no. 3 cans; Spinach, 14 no. 2
or 9 no. 3 cans; Sweet potatoes,
30 no. 2 or 20 no. 3 cans; Toma-
toes, 22 no. 2 or 15 no. 3 cans. ,
FRUIT: Apples, 30 no. 2 or 20
no. 3 cans; Blackberries, 50 no. 2
or 30 no. 3 cans; Strawberrnes, 45
no. 2 or 30 no. 3 cans; Peaches, 25
no. 2 or 18 no. 3cans; Plums, 451
no. 2 or 30 no. 3 cans; Pears, 16 no.
2 or 10 no. 3 cans
Kansas City Life Ins. Co.
J. G. FUQUA, District Manager
801 American Natl. Bank Beaumont, Texas
Mrs. Clyde Pedigo of Hull and -
Mrs. Carter Hart of Kountze were j
joint hostesses at the home of Mrs.
Hart near Kountze for a miscel-
laneous shower on May 30, honor-
ing Miss Elizabeth Marshall. Mrs
Claud Lee Marshall and Mrs. N.
S. Matthews presided at the punch
bowl, and Miss Henrietta Marshall (
and Miss Lois Mounce had charge
of the guest book. Four little
girls dressed in costumes of red
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Mrs. John Tilbury of Fletcher
community went home from afde-
monstration given in cheese mak-
ing at the home of Mrs. H. De-
laune, Wednesday, May 23, and
made American cheese herself.
“I never would have thought of
making cheese”, Mrs. Tilbury said,
“If I hadn’t seen it done.”
Making American cheese is a
very simple process and requires
only milk, coloring and a rennet
tablet, but it is not advisable to
make cheese this time of year un-
less one has a convenient place
for keeping the cheese cool unti
it ripens.
ning, on Thursday, June 21st at
2:00 P. M. Mrs. Hensarling, who
is representing the Kerr Jar Com-
pany will give the demonstration.
Saratoga club women have re
cently secured a club room and
furnished it with the necessary
equipment. They have also added
curtains, braided rugs, rocking
chairs and those things which
make it attractive and comfort-
able. The room is located between
the Post Office and Drug Store in
Saratoga.
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We have in this vicinity some fine, reputable makes in Up-
rights and Grands to be sold as low as 25c on the dollar. Fu’ly
Guaranteed. Unusually liberal terms while limited stock lasts.
As little as $20.00 will buy a Piano. These Piancs were bought
from receivers of Pace Piano Company. Write or Phone Im-
mediately; phone 1199.
■ JAVA A’/X /X ZV/X JAM fl ZV/A J*A JX JXJX JXJX.
velvet trimmed with gold braici,
bearing a huge go1 den basket
trimmed with red hearts, were led
to the guest of honor by little
Hugh Peebles, Jr., aged one year.
He represented Dan Cupid, wear-
ing a red ribbon and golden ar-
rows. Little Miss Charlsye Van-'
derburg of Silsbee, dressed in '
bridal costume, gave a reading ap-
propriate to the occasion. Other
children on the program were
Frances McKim, Veda Margaret«
Bevil, Betty Emily Marshall, Ruth
and Vivian Crosby, Frances Ann'
Tucker, Oga Beatrice Prather,
Joyce Elaine Wiggins, Bill Pedigo,
Cooper Hart and Carter Hart, Jr.
Many people of the county have
asked for the approximate “turn-
out” of fruits and vegetables when
canned. The following is an ap-
proximate estimate:
VEGETABLES: Beans, lima, 50
no. 2 cans or 30 no. 3 cans; String
beans, 30 no. 2 or 20 no. 3 cans;
Corn, 45 no. 2 or 25 no. 3 cans;
Okra, 35 no. 2 or 23 no. 3 cans;
Mustard, 14 no. 2 or 9 no. 3 cans;
Luther Gregory, who is quite a
traveler lately, has been working
in Barbers Hill, but couldn’t stay
The women of the Home Dem- away from Silsbee and visited here
onstration Club at Saratoga will Monday and Tuesday. He will
be hostesses to those of Hardin probably be in Barbers Hill all the
County who are interested in can- summer.
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XTXTM W WVWV.
HERE’S ONE
REASON
vx rithin its own boundaries,
W this company, like each of
the 24 Bell System associated
companies, operate* its own
long distance system. But A.
T. & T. trunk lines (shown on
map) link these 24 separate
systems into a nation-wide
unit, over which skilled opera-
torscan send yourvoice almost
with the speed of a local call
to the remote reaches of the
country.
Such nation-wide service
would be virtually impossible
without equipment built to
the same designs and used in
the same way . . . without
operators trained in the same
methods... without, in short,
a nation-wide organization
behind it.
How effectively A. T. & T.
meets this need is shov^n by
the fact that today 9 out of 10
long distance calls go through
while you hold the line; by the
constant pushing back of the
frontiers of the voice until 92
per cent of the world’s tele-
phones are now within your
reach; by four reductions in
long distance rates, made vol-
untarily in recent years.
Here you may see the work-
ings of a fundamental Bell
System policy, adopted be-
cause we believe it to be a
policy that works. In an or-
ganization planned like the
telephone service for the long
pull, we feel that what is best
for the telephone user becomes
in the end the course that will
bring us the sounder, more
certain success.
SOUTHWESTERN BELL
TELEPHONE COMPANY
why long distance
calls are t d St
Cbc Silsbee Bee
NOTICE OF SHERIFF’S SALE
David Read, Editor and Publisher
Published every Thursday
___________________________•
SUBSCRIPTION $1.50 A YEAR—CASH
EDITORIAL
MARINE NEWS
(
O'
&
15c
28c
Entered as secund-class matter April
10, 1919, at the post office at Silsbee
Texas, under the act of March 3. 1879
A. R. NEYLAND
Red & White Store
10c
,10c
from the 3rd day of May, 1934, in
favor of A. Kaplan, Trustee under
the Last Will and Testament oi
Henry Kaplan, deceased, and cost
of suit.
Given under my hand this the
5th day of June, A. D. 1934.
M. D. JORDAN, Sheriff,
Hardin County, Texas.
By B. F. CREEL, Deputy
FLETCHER HOME DE-
MONSTRATION CLUB
r
CHOICE OF ROAST, lb.
Fancy Red and White
Butter, lb.....................
NOTICE—Cards of Thanks, and
a 1 1 notices of entertainments
where an admission is charged
will be charged for at the rate of
one cent per word. Cash in ad-
vance.
We Handle Only Choice Quality Packing
House Beef and Veal—It’s Stamped
CHOICE OF STEAKS, lb. 18c
Fresh Ground Veal, lb..
Fresh Rib Stew, lb.........
We handle a complete line of cheese and lunch meats.
Watch our circular for other specials.
GUARD YOURSELF
AGAINST APPENDICITIS
DURING SUMMER
By virtue of an alias execution
issued out of the Honorable Dis-
trict Court of the 60th Judicial
District of Jefferson County, on
the 5th day of June, A. D. 1934,
by the clerk thereof in the case of
A. Kaplan, in his capacity as
Trustee under the Last Will and
Testament of Henry Kaplan, de-
ceased, vs. Lambert Farms, Inc.,
a corporation, in cause number
42976, and to me, as sheriff, di-
rected, and delivered, I will pro-
ceed to sell, within the hours pre
scribed by law for Sheriff’s sales,
n the FIRST TUESDAY in JULY,
A. D. 1934, same being the 3rd day
of said month, before the Court
House door of Hardin County, in
the town of Kountze, Texas, the
following described real estate sit-
uated in Hardin County, Texas,
and being described .as follows:
Being in Section Seventy-Two
(72) H.T.&B.R.R. Cert. No.—., and
known and described as follows,
to-wit: The undivided two-thirds
of First: The Northwest quarter
of North East quarter of South
East quarter (N W 1-4 of N E 1-4
of S E 1-4) and containing ten (10)
acres. Second: The South half of
North East quarter of South East
quarter (S 1-2 of N E 1-4 of S E
1-4) containing Twenty (20) acres
Third: The North half of South
East quarter of South East quarter
(N 1-2 of S E 1-4 of S E 1-4) con-
taining Twenty (20) acres.
Fourth: The South East quarter
of South East quarter of South
East quarter (S E 1-4 of S E 1-4
of S E 1-4) containing Ten (IO'*
acres. Fifth: The North half of
North West quarter of South East
quarter (N 1-2 of N W 1-4 of S E
1-4) containing Twenty (20) acres.
Sixth: The South East quarter of
North West quarter of South East
quarter (S E 1-4 of N W 1-4 of S
E 1-4) containing Ten (10) acres
Seventh: The North West quarter
of South West quarter of South
East quarter (N W 1-4 of S W 1-4
of S. E. 1-4) containing Ten (10)
acres. Eighth: The South half of
South West quarter of South East
quarter (S 1-2 of S W 1-4 of S E
1-4) containing Twenty (20) acres
Being a portion of the property
acquired by me from the state of
Texas, by Patent No. 411, datee
June 1901, and duly recorded in
Hardin County, Texas. Said undi-
vided two-thirds aggreg a t i n g
Eighty (80) acres.
Said land being fully described iu
deed from B. M. Lambert to Lam-
bert Irrigation Co. Ltd., dated
July 5, 1902, recorded in Vol. 10,
page 53, et seq. of Deed Records
of Hardin County, Texas, to which
reference is made.
Levied on as the property of
Lambert Farms, Inc., this the 5th
day of June, 1934, to satisfy a
judgment amounting to Eighty-
Five Thousand Thirty-Six and
No | 100 ($85,036.00) Dollars and
6 percent interest, with interest at
the rate of 8 percent per annum
MARKET SPECIALS
FOR THE WEEK END
ISr
The following letter received by
the editor this week shows that our
side is not entirely without sup-
porters. This fellow, who forgot
to sign his name, came to our res
cue after the scorcher we got last
week. Here’s the letter: {
Silsbee, Texas
June 11, 1934
To the Editor of the Silsbee Bee:
Dear Sir:
I have been reading with inter-
est your articles on the pigs that
make our fair city their home. I
think you are wholly right in your
convictions that we ought to have
some kind of restriction placed on
stock to keep them from marring
the scenery and being a general
nuisance. It is a downright shame
that we have to tolerate pigs, cows
and horses being in our yards,
cemetery, on our sidewalks, and in
our gardens, where they spoil all
our earnest endeavors of months.
I cannot see the logic in the let-
ter printed in your paper last
week. I can’t see why the swine
of this community would starve
to death if they were barred from
a certain designated area—name-
ly, the town of Silsbee. Surely
they do not depend solely on the
garbage they salvage for their
daily sustenance I If »they do, then
the owners ought to bo ashamed
of themselves.
It’s a shame that a person can’t
make a fair rate of speed when
out riding because he is afraid he
might collide with some razorback
* that will always be worth twice
what he really is if his owner dis-
covers you caused his demise. I,
, for one, am for you; but if you
convince the old inhabitants of
this town who have lived among
the pigs all their lives and have
never known anything different,
you’ll surprise me.
You asked for the inhabitants
opinions and I have given you
mine. Here’s wishing you luck,
but I doubt your success in your
“Less Pigs Campaign.”
Yours sincerely,
AN INHABITANT
. EDITORS NOTE: And this in-
habitant doubts our success in the
. campaign. Well, so do we at
times, butzso many letters came
in boosting us for our stand that
-we have again regained faith.
What do you think of the cam-
ipaign? Come on, don’t be bash-
ful, write your opinion in.
EDITOR.
THE STATE OF TEXAS )
COUNTY OF HARDIN )
t
New Orleans, La., June 9 —
William F. z Winger and W. T.
; Townsend, formerly of Silsbee,
■< who were accepted for the Marines
(:at Marine Headquarters, 535 St.
, Charles St., New Orleans, La.,
•write that they are now stationed
in Quantico, Va., a short distance
from Washington, D. C., where
they have availed themselves of
.the opportunity offered every
Marine in that post of seeing the
..machinery of the Government in
action, and of visiting the many
..places of historic significance and
^artistic nterest in the Nation’s
Austin, Texas, June 9.— This
is the season of the year when
more deaths are recorded for ap-
pendicitis than in cooler weather.
A careful study by the State De-
partment of Health brought out
the fact that more appendicitis
deaths occured during the warm
months. Twelve months about
six hundred and fifty person died
of this disease, many of whom
•would be alive today if they had
not been delayed in calling a
doctor.
There are two principal causes
for these deaths: the first is de-
lay in calling a doctor, and the
second is the taking of strong
purges when one has pains in the
abdomen. When the appendix is
in a diseased condition the taking
of strong laxatives often results
in the rupturing of this organ. Of
the deaths mention, 588 of them
had ruptured appendix and thirty-
five per cent were not operated
upon.
The removal of an appendix is
now a very simple matter when
done early or before the appendix
becomes gangrenous and ruptures,
which may take place as early as
<15-18 hours after the onset of the
attack. In the case of abdominal
pain that persists do not take a
strong purge but call your physi-
cian as he will be able to tell you
whether or not you have appen-
dicitis and the method you should
use in treatment.
Many persons wonder why there
is so much appendicitis to'day
when years ago it was never men-
tioned. The reason for this is
that it has undoubtedly been with
us always but was unrecognized
as a specific condition. One of
the common names under which it
was cloaked was inflammation of
the bowels.
The women of Fletcher have the
real club spirit as is shown by
their determination to secure a
permanent«meeting place for Home
Demonstration and other public
meetings. The club room, located
at the school house, boasts a fresh
coat of paint, a new oil stove and
an 18 quart steam pressure cooker.
Each club woman considers the
pressure cooker hers when she
needs it.
A committee was appointed re-
cently to select suitable curtains
that would best serve both as cur-
tains and shades. The committee
put up attractive curtains made of
natural colored burlap.
. Capitol.
The Juantica base established
.during the world war and is main-
stained today as the East Coast
^Expeditionary Base. Only a few
hours may elapse between receipt
,..bf orders and departure of a ful-
Jy equipped battalion or regiment
.for expeditionary duty in some
foreign country. Quantico is also
"the home of the Signal Battalion
, and school, the aviation groups,
ifxand of various schools for both
officers and enlisted men. It is
K the largest post maintained by the
5Corps on the East coast.
Graduated by the local high
school, both these young men re-
ceived the basic trainging of a
.Marine at Parris Island, S. C.
Prior to entering the Marines,
.they lived with their parents in|,
^Silsbee.
4 Mrs, A. S. Norrid and son and
Mrs. J. W. Philmon and two chil-
dren spent Monday in Beaumont.
THE SILSBEE BEE
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Read, David. The Silsbee Bee (Silsbee, Tex.), Vol. 16, No. 24, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 14, 1934, newspaper, June 14, 1934; Silsbee, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1352958/m1/2/: accessed July 5, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Silsbee Public Library.